Obama defends Cuba, Iran policies

In a spirited defense of his foreign policy, President Obama said in an interview aired on late Sunday that normalizing relations with Cuba would bolster American influence there and that his diplomatic strategies to contain Russia and Iran are working.

The president, appearing on CNN’s “State of the Union” hosted by Candy Crowley, countered critics who have called his foreign policy naive. He dismissed the idea that international leaders such as Russian President Vladimir Putin are outwitting him.

Obama pointed to Russia’s growing financial crisis, including a steep devaluation of the ruble in recent weeks. Experts tie the decline mostly to falling oil prices, but say sanctions against Russia, pushed by the Obama administration, are contributing to the lack of confidence in Russia’s economy.

“There was a spate of stories about how he is the chess master and outmaneuvering the West,” Obama said of Putin. “Right now, he’s presiding over the collapse of his currency, a major financial crisis and a huge economic contraction. That doesn’t sound like somebody who has rolled me or the United States of America,” he added.

Diplomatic approach
During the interview, conducted on Friday before the president and his family left for vacation in Hawaii, Obama said he has been consistent in saying that he will resolve problems diplomatically where he can, rather than rely entirely on US military power.

“There is this knee-jerk sense, I think, on the part of some in the foreign policy establishment that, you know, shooting first and thinking about it second projects strength. I disagree with that,’’ he said.

International sanctions on Iran, for example, combined with negotiations to curb its nuclear program, have led Tehran to slow its progress, he said.

“Since we began negotiations with them, that’s probably the first year and a half in which Iran has not advanced its nuclear program in the last decade,” he said.

Likewise, opening diplomatic talks with Cuba—as the president announced last week—offers the US a chance to pursue a new strategy after decades of stalemate, Obama said.

“For 50 years, we’ve tried to see if we can overthrow the regime through isolation. It hasn’t worked,” he said. “If we engage, we have the opportunity to influence the course of events at a time when there’s going to be some generational change in that country,” Obama added.

Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona, who later appeared on the show, criticized the decision on Cuba.

“We would be rewarding the failure that they haven’t done anything,” he said, adding that in the absence of more progress from the Communist government, the US would be “endorsing their 50 years of oppression and repression in Cuba.”

Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina also criticized the president’s overture to Cuba and predicted Congress would move to block him.

“If you’re being offered the ambassadorship to Cuba, turn it down because you don’t have a snowball’s chance in hell of getting confirmed,” he said on CBS’s “Face the Nation.” “The Congress is not going to reinforce this policy. There will be no confirmation of an ambassador to Cuba because the Castro brothers are terrible dictators who deserve no new engagement. They deserve to be condemned and isolated,” he said.

Graham added that as the incoming chairman of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee for State and Foreign Operations, he would attempt to block funding for any embassy in Havana.

During his recorded interview, Obama also reiterated his intention to close the detention center at Guantanamo Bay.

“We need to close that facility and I’m going to do everything I can to close it,” Obama said. “It is contrary to our values and it is wildly expensive. We’re spending millions for each individual there. And we have drawn down the population there significantly,” he added.